Back to website

Monday, 11 December 2017

Why do Pilates teachers always talk about neutral? What does it mean and is it important?

Well, neutral can relate to almost all of our body alignment, such as feet, head, rib-cage, pelvis and spine. And like a car being in neutral gear, it means a position from which we can best move from. Our muscles are neither shortened nor lengthened. Our joints are in position for optimal movement and stability with minimal friction.

So, let's just take one part of the body - the pelvis and lumbar spine. The image on the left shows a neutral pelvis with bony landmarks labelled.

The three pelvic images below and to the left represent neutral as well as anterior and posterior pelvic tilt.

The arrows show the direction of the pelvic tilt. The relative position of the ASIS (Anterior Superior Iliac Spine), pubic bone (pubic joint) and the hip joint can also be seen.

So, how to know if we are in neutral here or not? There are several ways to assess pelvic alignment, but there's no gold standard measurement and everyone's neutral will be slightly different as our bodies are unique.

One method is line up the ASIS bones and the pubic bone. This is most easily felt when we lie on our back, with legs bent. If the bones feel fairly level on the front of the pelvis and we have a gentle upward curve in the lumbar spine - we're in a neutral position, or working towards one.

In contrast, if, when we lie down, the lower back is flat on the floor and we can't slide fingers under the lower back, then we're in a posterior pelvic tilt. We may also feel the pubic bone is higher than the ASIS bones.

So, is it important to be neutral? Have a look at the five following advantages to a neutral pelvis (as compared to a posterior tilt).

1. Muscles
In neutral, our muscles are in mid-range. Take the gluteal muscles; they are neither stretched nor contracted. They are ready to work. However, in a posterior tilt, glutes will be at a disadvantage. They may well feel tight because they are gripping to hold the pelvis in this position, but they won't be strong muscles.

Similarly, studies of the deep, postural muscles in neutral alignment show higher activity levels. In a posterior pelvic tilt, the deepest abdominals and pelvic floor are less active. This means we're less stable in this alignment.

2. Joints
In neutral, our joints are also ready to move. For example, the hip joint is free to move with a low likelihood of friction and therefore damage. In contrast, in a posterior pelvic tilt, the head of the femur will be pushed forward in its socket and therefore friction and damage to the joint are more likely. Hip movement is also likely to be restricted.

In neutral lumbar alignment, the discs, vertebrae, ligaments and muscles are all in an optimal position for movement, stability and shock absorption. In a posterior tilt, the lumbar spine is flattened meaning the discs are more likely to be damaged because of the forward compression when combined with loading of our body weight.

3. Bone alignment
In neutral pelvis, the pubic joint and the sitting bones are in place to take the weight of pelvic and abdominal organs. In a posterior pelvic tilt, the bones are in a different position meaning the pelvic floor muscles and fascia have to help take the weight of the organs instead. This is one risk factor for pelvic organ prolapse.

4. Muscle balance
If all of the body is well aligned, muscle balance should be optimal. This means muscles will be in mid-range, neither lengthened or shortened. But in a posterior tilt, there is an effect above and below the pelvis on other connecting muscles. For instance, hamstrings, which attach to the sitting bones, will be shortened.

5. Intra-abdominal pressure
The diaphragm increases this pressure as we breathe. With neutral rib-cage and pelvic alignment, this helps to stabilise us. However, if the alignment isn't neutral, the effects of this pressure can change.
A posterior tilt can create an altered and upward pressure on the abdominal
organs moving the guts closer to the diaphragm and increasing the risk
of a hiatal hernia.

So, these are some of the reasons that Pilates teachers encourage neutral alignment.

Body awareness is a big factor here as many of us are unaware of our alignment, Pilates teachers included!

For the posterior pelvic tilt, it tends to come from a gluteal gripping pattern. This may have started during pregnancy as a way to stabilise or it might be a result of sport or dance training. Alternatively, we might do it more consciously as a way of flattening the lower abdomen to feel slimmer.

Whatever the reason, it's worth releasing the hips and working on the gluteal gripping to gain the benefits of neutral!

Monday, 9 October 2017

Okay, so I'm not talking about contraception, I'm talking about the sheet of muscles in the lower ribcage that we use to breathe.

Here it is (courtesy of 3D Yoga) in motion.

It's funny which muscles we're more aware of in our bodies. We don't necessarily all leave school with a good understanding of anatomy and how our bodies function. But if we're a singer or a musician we may be more likely to know about our diaphragm and how it moves as we breathe optimally.

If you work in the fitness industry, go to the gym or read fitness magazines then you may notice that the fitness world appears to be obsessed with certain muscles. Many of these muscles are associated with body building and weights such as abs, pecs, traps, lats, biceps etc. In contrast, the diaphragm has a relatively low public profile. Few people go off to the gym because they want to get their diaphragm firing, stretching and strengthening. But we should be! We should be more aware of it!

Perhaps the diaphragm just needs some good PR to help boost our awareness? Because without this baby, basic functions such as breathing, blood circulation and digestion would either not happen or would not work as well.

It's not going to sell magazines by being on the cover. But its health should be high up there on our list of priorities.

If you're not yet convinced, here are 6 reasons to be more aware of your diaphragm and to use it better.

We need it to breathe well (basic stuff - this helps keep us alive - do our biceps do this?) And when we breathe well we get other benefits too (see take a breather blog).

It helps blood pump from and to the heart (again, hard to ignore, basic life-giving stuff).

It keeps our ribcage mobile when it's active. And a mobile upper back
can take some of the strain out of the lower back.

It makes a big difference to our
digestion (optimal breathing using the diaphragm helps to massage
our digestive system improving how well we digest food).

It helps to balance out pressures and forces through the abdomen - associated with hernias, organ prolapse and diastasis recti.

If you're convinced, you can get started by feeling under your lower ribs on the front of the body.
Push your fingers up and under the lowest ribs. As you breathe in the diaphragm pushes your fingers out and away and as you breathe
out it moves up and allows your fingers to move further up under the ribs. You can leave your hands here and watch the video above again and see if you can get a sense of what you feel with the image on the screen.

To keep your diaphragm healthy, like any other muscle, we need to use it. We can do this by gently
aiming our breath down to the lower ribs on the sides and back of the
ribcage. Have a go and keep the effort relaxed and the exhales long.

Thursday, 25 May 2017

A recent study published in the International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy* found a significant relationship between breathing and functional
movement. Participants with normal breathing performed better
on the functional movement tests than those with dysfunctional
breathing. The functional movement tests were based on exercises like
squats and lunges that involve both mobility and stability. Normal
breathing was defined as diaphragmatic breathing and dysfunctional breathing was breathing that uses just the upper chest, over-using neck and shoulder muscles with less use of the diaphragm.

Really,
the majority of us are somewhere between normal and dysfunctional. Most of
us can improve our breathing and feel many potential benefits from doing
so. These benefits can be better sports performance, improved
mobility in the spine and rib-cage, improved core strength (as the
diaphragm is a key part of our core (see Getting down to the Core blog)), less
pain in neck and shoulder muscles and also decreased stress levels.

I would call this normal breathing optimal breathing as we can work towards it and for many of us it isn't yet normal!

Optimal breathing uses the diaphragm for 75% of effort and the intercostals between the ribs account for the remaining 25%. This means that neck and shoulder muscles are barely used to breathe with.

Source: Wikimedia Commons

The diaphragm
connects to the base of the breastbone, to the lower ribs and to the
lumbar vertebrae. It separates the thorax from the abdomen.

The diagram above shows, as we
inhale, the diaphragm contracts and it's outer edges pull the ribs
outward and upward. The intercostal
muscles help by pulling the ribs further apart. The thoracic cavity
expands and air is drawn into the lungs.

At the same time, the
abdominal cavity is compressed and the abdominal and pelvic organs move
down meaning the abdominal wall has to expand outwards and forwards to
accommodate this. The transverse abdominus relaxes and the pelvic floor descends as it receives the increased load of abdominal and pelvic organs.

In the optimal exhale the diaphragm elastically recoils back up higher into the rib cage, abs and pelvic floor contract and the intercostals relax. This sends air back out of the lungs.

It
sounds simple, so why don't we all breathe optimally? Well chances are
that we did when we were young. And then something changed and our
breathing changed too. This might have been a physical change to our
body - such as our spine and rib-cage stiffened with a lifestyle of
sitting and inactivity or we may have had a baby which can both change
our spinal alignment and the position of the diaphragm. Or it might be that stress and anxiety have changed the
optimal breathing to something more rapid and shallow.

The
most common breathing dysfunction is chest breathing (referred to as
'thoracic' breathing in the paper). This type of breathing is short
exhalation followed by shallow inhalation. Muscles in the neck and
shoulders overwork to sustain this. The position of the ribs may well
be altered so the front, lower ribs flare upwards. There is likely to
be a lack of mobility in the lower ribs and potentially muscle pain in
the neck and shoulders.

So, where to start on
retraining your breath? In many cases it's about re-acclimatising the
brain to higher CO2 levels by gradually using longer exhales. And
breathing into the back and the sides of the rib-cage, activating the diaphragm more to encourage fuller inhalation.

The paper concludes that "future research is needed to validate breathing re‐education programs
and the role they have in treating pain disorders, preventing injury,
and improving movement patterns." Joseph Pilates understood this many years ago - so perhaps your first call when looking to improve your breathing technique should be your Pilates teacher...

Thursday, 30 March 2017

Lower back pain can be broken down into acute and persistent. The latter is pain that continues for more than three months after the initial episode. Persistent back pain defines the ongoing back problems that many of us experience.

And why do we suffer pain in our lower backs? If we sprain a calf muscle in our leg, it causes acute pain and we initially rest the muscle and avoid over-loading it or over-stretching it. Then, when the calf feels better we start to use it again and we gradually build back our activity levels on the leg.

In contrast, lower backs are more complicated. For starters, it's much harder to move around without bending or twisting or loading our backs - than it would be for a calf or a wrist.

And then something changes in our pain response, meaning we carry on feeling pain long after the initial tissue damage has repaired. Our sensitisation to pain becomes different. Our pain threshold lowers and we feel pain when we make small movements that shouldn't damage or hurt our backs.

Our bodies are tough and designed to take heavy loads. If we feel pain because we've
lifted an excessively heavy weight then that might cause a back injury. However,
feeling pain when we lift a leg
to get out of a car, is unlikely to be due to actual damage to our
backs. The pain is real pain, but it is likely to be part of the
increased sensitivity to pain, rather than due to actual injury.

And so with this persistent pain, we alter the way we feel about our back and the way we hold ourselves and the way we move. We become less likely to move our backs and we develop stiff, tense muscles, altered blood flow and vertebrae and discs that don't get enough movement to stay healthy and hydrated.

Now, we're stuck in a pain cycle of increased awareness of pain and protecting our backs by moving less. Often there are other factors too. We sleep less, we feel increasingly stressed and there may be other difficult events going on in our lives at the same time, all coming together at once.

So the good news here is that Pilates can help and be a part of the plan to manage this pain. Pilates
exercises can work in several ways to help break this pain cycle. Firstly, it helps increase more positive awareness of how our bodies feel and move. And without awareness, we're unlikely to change anything in our body (such as our posture, our movement patterns or our
physical activity levels).
Secondly, it helps us to relax our mind and body and so we can feel more confident about movement. The Franklin Method releases are particularly good here.

Then Pilates helps us to find the gentle movement that we need for our spine to be more mobile again.

And last but not least, Pilates builds up the core stability that we need to stabilise our lower back and pelvis.

So if you haven't yet tried Pilates, do get in touch to talk about a 1-1 or joining a class.

Wednesday, 18 January 2017

The core is the centre, the inside. And our core, like this apple's is central to our body and pretty deep inside us.

Unlike the apple, what we have is an 'anticipatory core' which is several sets of muscles which are designed to fire up before we move a limb. This means stability for the abdomen (and therefore our lower back) every time we need it.

And these muscles are constantly active as we're using them to breathe all the time.

For this anticipatory system to function well we need to have and to keep the following -

1. Good posture - particularly how the rib-cage and the pelvis align.

2. Good breathing - using the diaphragm and the intercostal muscles between the ribs to produce optimal diaphragmatic breathing.

3. Motor control of our Transverse Abdominus and our pelvic floor muscles - being about to identify and connect to both sets of muscles. (Research suggests that in those of us with back problems these muscles fire differently - often more slowly or at too high an intensity). These muscles also need to relax as well as to contract. Short, tight muscles are not strong muscles.

4. And a lack of tension in our bodies - conscious and unconscious gripping of muscles in the lower abdomen or the chest can also affect how our core functions.

So exercises that train and then strengthen our core are going to be
relatively gentle movements combined with body awareness - feeling
what's working and what isn't working.

When we work harder our bodies will automatically fire more superficial muscles as well. This can mask a problem and reinforce our compensation patterns by more superficial muscles that aren't designed to stabilise us.

So doing lots of high impact ab work (e.g. lying on your back with both legs, both arms and your head lifted) is great if you have optimal posture, you breathe well, you move well and have full, functioning motor control of the pelvic floor and deepest abs and you don't have a gripping pattern in your body. But how many of us can honestly say - "Yes, that's me"?!!

Some of the best trained Pilates teachers take a minimum of a year to finish training so they have the time to get their bodies to the point where they can master the hardest classical Pilates exercises. That tells us something..

For a functioning body that feels good - we need to get down to the core.

And below, two clients tell us the benefits they gain from our way of training and strengthening the core.

I have been surprised at the impact small and seemingly gentle movements have had on my body. Pilates has improved my body awareness, flexibility and strength. I come away from each session feeling more toned but at the same time really relaxed and stretched out.

My job causes me to hunch my shoulders a lot thus causing a lot of stress on my neck, shoulders and arms, physical activity does not relieve this but Pilates has helped an incredible amount, through muscle release, breathing techniques and strengthening core muscle. In particular one to one sessions have helped me to really locate the different muscles and work on them to relieve the tension. I also used to suffer a lot with headaches but they are much less frequent now and if I feel one coming on then I can usually apply something from Pilates to relieve it.

Elizabeth H

Caroline’s classes are well structured and she is a careful and focussed instructor. I have begun to understand how small but targeted movement can really help flexibility and mobility. I enjoy the classes and feel I am learning about how my body works and how I can maintain it in good working order.